
The Western Arizona Humane Society is located within walking distance of our house, and I often think about strolling over there, yet know what would happen. Two Amazon parrots for us to feed and care for is more than enough responsibility at this stage of life.
Joleen and I do miss having a dog around the house, and just recently took care of two Shih Tzus, “Tucker” and “Jake.” It was a pleasure having their company, and our birds loved it as well.
I’m always on the lookout for irresponsible pet owners and see many around town. Walking a dog on asphalt when it’s 100 degrees outside is nothing but pure torture and animal abuse.
That sun-drenched pavement is more like 140 degrees, hot enough to fry an egg. I feel like walking up to these guilty pet owners and thumping them upside the head with my index finger, while saying, “Hello McFly, is anyone home?”
For those who don’t recognize this unusual statement, it comes from the movie series “Back to the Future.” A big bully in the films, Biff Tannen, thumped Marty McFly on the head numerous times to get his attention. That would probably be considered assault these days and get me arrested or a black eye.
I want to do the same when it’s extremely hot outside, and people have dogs tied up in the backs of their trucks while they drive around in the comfort of their cabs with the air conditioner going full blast.
Worse yet, are those folks leaving animals in vehicles with the engines off while they go inside a store or medical office. Out-of-state weekenders are bad at doing so while they hit the beach at Rotary Park. I’ve called animal control a couple of times over the past 10 years.
Transients panhandling for money on street corners during the summer months with dogs on leashes also gets my goat. The dog is primarily there for sympathy’s sake and used as a tool to garner a few extra bucks.
Over the years, dogs and cats have been inhumanely used in scientific experiments. I remember learning about “Pavlov’s dogs” in psychology class, but never found out what happened to the canines after the experiments were over until just recently.
I was more interested in that above anything else, with the instructor never saying, although she probably knew. In the case of Ivan Pavlov’s dogs, our class wasn’t told that during the fall of Leningrad, Russia, they were eaten.
Ivan Pavlov’s experiment with dogs involved measuring their salivary responses to food, which led him to notice that the dogs began to salivate not only when food was presented but also in response to stimuli associated with food, such as the sound of a bell.
This observation formed the basis of classical conditioning, a learning process in which an animal or human learns to associate an unrelated stimulus with a specific response. The lunch buzzer from my school days is a great example, with kids trying to be first in the cafeteria line.
In his experiments, Pavlov would ring a bell before feeding the dogs, and over time, the dogs learned to associate the bell with the arrival of food, eventually salivating just at the sound of the bell, even when no food was given. This sounds like cruelty to me. That’s like my wife saying it’s time to eat and nothing is prepared.
Pavlov’s work laid the foundation for behaviorism in psychology, illustrating how environmental stimuli can influence behavior through learned associations. German Shepherds were one of the most common breeds used until Beagles came along.
I was never impressed with Pavlov’s experiments, finding that anyone with a teaspoon of common sense would know this information without abusing animals. Cavemen had things figured out long before Ivan, at least the one that Geico employs.
A time may yet come when I take that walk and come back with a doggie on a leash. It won’t happen in summer for obvious reasons. I still have a desire for one breed in particular, the Pekingese, as we had a couple of them over 16 years. Because they are so well loved, not many “Pekes” turn up at the center, according to a former worker there. I can believe that.
It’s too bad that Ivan Pavlov isn’t still alive, because other dog lovers and I would have a bone to pick with him. As a scientific experiment, I’d love to have the man eat dry Purina each day of the week. Common sense tells me by the end of that first feeding, Pavlov would be asking for a bowl of water, perhaps even two.



















